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Moshe Phillips. Credit: Courtesy.

Moshe Phillips

Moshe Phillips, a veteran pro-Israel activist and author, is the national chairman of Americans For a Safe Israel (AFSI). A former board member of the American Zionist Movement, he previously served as national director of the U.S. division of Herut and worked with CAMERA in Philadelphia. He was also a delegate to the 2020 World Zionist Congress and served as editor of The Challenger, the publication of the Tagar Zionist Youth Movement. His op-eds and letters have been widely published in the United States and Israel.

Many nations cast their votes not on the basis of what is right or wrong, or what is just or unjust, but according to their narrow interests.
From a new vantage point in Jerusalem, he wrote about the dangers facing Israel and the antisemitism of its enemies.
The 1929 massacre by local Arabs is not just a painful chapter in the past, but a reality that still impacts the region.
The vast majority of Jordanians are Palestinian Arabs according to their history, culture, language and religion.
Free speech is not an absolute right; it comes with responsibility.
The issue isn’t whether celebrities have the right to comment on international issues. But they should know what they are talking about.
There could be no national revival without moral and physical strength, and no lasting peace without respect—earned through resilience and integrity.
Omer Bartov was accusing Israel of such “crimes” even before Oct. 7.
It doesn’t easily fit with the concept of being a fully acculturated American; in fact, it evokes separatism and attachment to a foreign land.
The operation against Iran’s nuclear infrastructure wasn’t reckless. Quite the opposite: It was necessary.
Unity is powerful, offering clear evidence against the idea that this society is fractured to the point of civil war.
Policies concerning refugees, foreign aid and ceasefires must be informed by the reality that a large segment of Gaza’s population supports a terror group.